During a BBC interview, a senior Hamas representative stormed out when asked how the terrorists rationalized killing Israeli families while they slept in their beds.
Hugo Bachega, the BBC's Middle East reporter, spoke with Ghazi Hamad, the deputy foreign minister for Hamas in Gaza, over the heinous slaughter of up to 1,500 Israelis.
In the interview, Mr. Hamad implied that when Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, the terrorists did not have orders to harm people.
Instead, they parachuted into the desert, surrounded the Nova Festival, and massacred 260 attendees as they escaped for their life.
Since then, footage of the Be'eri Kibbutz massacre—in which victims were killed while still in bed—has surfaced.
Pictures from the site display the rooms covered in bloodstains.
Hamas gunmen slaughtered at least one hundred residents of the hamlet and left three dead bodies to fester inside the bedroom of one house.
A puddle of blood surrounds a face-down lady. At least six gunshot holes can be seen on the wall behind her, and her blonde hair is smeared with blood.
A terrifying set of images depicted the devastation left by Hamas militants shooting at a preschool, leaving teddy bears covered in gunshot wounds and an undetermined number of innocent people dead.
Mr. Hamad responded to the fatalities in the BBC interview by stating that "there were clashes and confrontations" because "the area was very wide."
Then, according to BBC journalist Mr. Bachega, when they broke into people's houses, it was not a confrontation.
"It is my assurance that we did not intend or decide to kill civilians," Mr. Hamad said.
He was then questioned about how he could defend murdering individuals while they slept.
At that point, Mr. Hamad turns to face the side and takes off his microphone.
"I wish to terminate this interview," he declared.
Then he hurled the microphone on the ground, putting a stop to the conversation.
Watch video below, you can see the interview here
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